Robin Smith

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Last year, Kathi Appelt won a Newbery Honor for her dark and magical novel, The Underneath. Given that Appelt is also the author of stunning nonfiction (Down Cut Shin Creek) and many picture books (I am partial to Bubba and Beau), I was curious to see what she would try next. Turns out, Keeper has many of the same elements of last year’s stunner for junior high and high schoolers, but with a completely different feel. Both books rely on magical elements and old stories, but Keeper, with its 10-year-old main character, is more suitable for younger children, despite its length.

The main character, Keeper, is having a terrible day. Everything she touches, from a very special bowl to her mother’s gumbo pot to a neighbor’s ukulele, is ruined. Keeper longs to make things right.

When she was only three years old, Keeper was abandoned by her mother, Meggie Marie, and her memories of that day are shaky and fading. She has been cared for since that time by young Signe, who loves and protects her with a ferocious love. Never speaking ill of Meggie Marie, Signe allows Keeper to remember her mother as a mermaid, assuming that one day Keeper will stop believing in magic. But Keeper loves all things magical and marine; she knows all about selkies, mermaids and sirens. Keeper decides she has no other choice but to try to make one horrible day better with the aid of her mermaid mother, whom she believes will show herself, with the aid of the magical moon.

Keeper sneaks out, taking only her dog, well after Signe is asleep. She has a plan in her heart and the sure knowledge of a girl in search of a mother who has been gone for seven years—and for Keeper, seven is a magical number. All the action takes place in one day, but flashbacks and Keeper’s own memory allow the reader to take in the whole story. Magic, history, geography and a special dog and seagull come together on one scary night when everything goes wrong . . . and right.

Appelt's seamlessly woven story slowly draws the reader from a small boat on a tidal stream of a blue moon and into the heart of one little girl whose hopes and wishes bring her everything she is meant to have. This landscape is rich in everything a reader wants: romance, setting and secondary characters who are both magical and realistic.

How does Appelt do it all? As Signe would say, that’s a question for the universe. I am just glad she did.

Last year, Kathi Appelt won a Newbery Honor for her dark and magical novel, The Underneath. Given that Appelt is also the author of stunning nonfiction (Down Cut Shin Creek) and many picture books (I am partial to Bubba and Beau), I was curious to…

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This true story has everything a dog lover is looking for: loyalty, bravery and drama. Add a splash of patriotism and some strawberry Pop-Tarts and you’ve got yourself the feel-good picture book of the fall.

Nubs, so-named because his ears had been cut off to “make him a dog of war,” was a skinny, hungry dog with no owner when Major Brian Dennis discovered him one fall morning in Iraq. In short order, Marine and canine were inseparable. While on the base, Nubs and Brian walked guard duty together, and Brian gave Nubs love, food and many belly rubs. Whenever Brian had to leave the base, Nubs would chase his Humvee until he couldn’t run anymore. Time after time, Brian would leave and Nubs would follow, running until his body gave out.

Once, with a burst of determination, Nubs followed Brian 70 miles in the snow, from the border of Syria to the border of Jordan. One would think such dedication would earn Nubs a place by Major Dennis’ side forever, but there was one big problem. It was against the rules for a Marine to have a dog. They were reported to superiors and Brian was given four days to ‘get rid of the dog, or else.’ Stateside financial support saved Nubs and he was quickly shipped to San Diego, where he was met by Brian’s friends who cared for him during the last months of Brian’s tour of duty.

Not only is this an inspiring dog story, Nubs is a perfect book for children who want to learn a little more about life in a war zone. There is no political agenda here, only the story of a soldier doing his job with a loving dog at his heels. Photographs are presented scrapbook style and, though many readers already know the outcome, the authors build the suspense and emotion to the heartwarming ending. I imagine more than a few happy tears will be shed by dog-loving children and adults as they turn the final pages.

Robin Smith is a second-grade teacher in Nashville.

This true story has everything a dog lover is looking for: loyalty, bravery and drama. Add a splash of patriotism and some strawberry Pop-Tarts and you’ve got yourself the feel-good picture book of the fall.

Nubs, so-named because his ears had been cut off to “make…

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